Quote:
Originally Posted by JULIA
I thought the 30 day-shred was absolutely terrible.
She has you working the same muscle group day after day = a big no-no. Plus, a lot of her cardio movements are super high-impact. I didn't even break a sweat from doing this.
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Depends on what you are doing. If you aren't actually stressing the muscles to the point of needing to recover, then you can easily do them daily without issue.
Exercising major muscle groups every day, in and of itself, is not necessarily a no-no. If it was then we'd have to spend every other day in bed. Even in talking about "really" working out the major muscles to the point of ideally requiring recovery time, it's not necessarily a no-no. Think of hard laborers: they often stress their muscles every day during a work week.
In general terms, recovery is ideal, but people work muscles without recovery on a fairly regular basis in many different situation.
Exercise is a funny thing because for every "right/wrong" way to things there is a situation where the exact opposite is true. For example, there are *proper* weightlifting techniques that the general gym-goer would point out as "wrong" according to what they were told; but serious weightlifting is very different than the basic that the typical gym-goer would do and what the average gym-goer will have picked up somewhere as "right" and "wrong" is very different for a lifter.
Another right/wrong example I encounter often is the idea of what is "correct" for a squat. In my kettlebell trainings, there are many positions where we drop into a very low (less than 90 degree angle in the knees) where I have to re-educate participants because they've "learned" that this technique is "wrong". It's not wrong, but I would accept that it's advanced and so it's easier to say it's "wrong" so people won't try it without good form or proper strength developed to maintain good form. Also, in kettlebells, there is a lot of whole body movement where the legs are used to assist a lift, for example; and often participants have been trained to "isolate" which is not "wrong" but it is a different technique that is used for different kinds of training. But they have been trained that assisting with other major muscles is "wrong" so again re-education must ensue.
The biggest key is listening to your own body and learning to distinguish what it is saying to you.